There are country fans who will listen to anything with just a little bit of twang to it, and then there are those diehards who go out of their way to tell you they only like real country, the kind that you heard on the radio when Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard were still alive. That latter group would no doubt be drawn to the Randy Rogers Band, who are perhaps more polished and pop literate than some of their outlaw forebears but are nonetheless more classically minded than many of their contemporaries. The six-piece band has attracted the attention of genre luminaries like Alison Krauss and Willie Nelson, who have cameoed on past albums, and their songs tend toward all the classic country staples — opining about long stretches of highway, lonely watering holes and the one that got away. Rogers and company recently recorded their ninth studio LP in Nashville, which seems about right.